Transcript Chapter 8

Chapter 8
Economic Integration
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Learning Objectives
To review types of economic integration
among countries
To examine the costs and benefits of
integrative arrangements
To understand the structure of the European
Union and its implications for firms within and
outside Europe
To explore the emergence of other integration
agreements, especially in the Americas and
Asia
To suggest corporate response to advancing
economic integration
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Introduction
Economic integration is best
viewed as a spectrum with the
various integrative agreements in
effect today lying in the middle of
this spectrum
The level of integration defines the
nature and degree of economic
links among countries
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Levels of Economic
Integration
Trading bloc:
preferential
economic
arrangement
among a group of
countries
Trading blocs may
take various
forms:
Free trade area
Customs union
Common market
Economic union
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The Free Trade Area and the
Customs Union
The free trade area is
the least restrictive
and loosest form of
economic integration
among countries
In a free trade area,
all barriers to trade
among member
countries are
removed
Members of a
customs union
dismantle barriers to
trade in goods and
services among
themselves
A customs union
establishes a
common trade policy
with respect to
nonmembers
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The Common Market and the
Economic Union
A common market has
no barriers to trade
among members and
has a common external
trade policy
Factors of production
are mobile among
members
Members of a common
market must be
prepared to cooperate
closely in monetary,
fiscal, and employment
policies
The creation of a true
economic union requires
integration of economic
policies in addition to the
free movement of goods,
services, and factors of
production
Under this union,
members would
harmonize monetary
policies, taxation, and
government spending and
a common currency would
be used by all members
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Arguments Surrounding
Economic Integration
A number of arguments surround
economic integration
These arguments center on:
Trade creation and diversion
The effects of integration on import
prices, competition, economies of
scale, and factor productivity
The benefits of regionalism versus
nationalism
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Trade Creation and Trade
Diversion
Whereas trade creation
is positive in moving
toward freer trade, and
therefore lower prices
for consumers within the
EU, the impact of trade
diversion is negative
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Reduced Import Prices
When a small country imposes a
tariff on imports, the price of the
goods will typically rise, which will
in turn result in lower demand for
the imported goods
When a bloc of countries imposes
the tariff, the fall in demand for the
imported goods will be substantial
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Increased Competition
and Economies of Scale
Integration increases market size
and may result in a lower degree
of monopoly in the production of
certain goods and services
Certain industries may not be
economically viable in smaller,
trade protected countries
Internal economies of scale
External economies of scale
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Higher Factor Productivity and
Regionalism Versus Nationalism
When factors of
production are freely
mobile, the wealth
of the common
market countries, in
aggregate, will likely
increase
Factor mobility will
not benefit each
country in the
common market
The biggest
impediment to
economic integration
remains the
reluctance of nations
to surrender a
measure of their
autonomy
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European Integration
Economic integration in Europe
from 1948 to the mid 1980s:
Organization for European Economic
Cooperation (OEEC)
Treaty of Rome
European Free Trade Association (EFTA)
Common agricultural policy (CAP)
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European Integration
The European Union
since the mid 1980s:
1992 White Paper
European Union (EU)
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Organization of the EU
The executive body of the EU is the
European Commission,
headquartered in Brussels
The Council of Ministers has the
final power to decided EU actions
The future expansion of the EU will
cause changes in the decision
making processes
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Implications of the Integrated
European Market
Perhaps the most important implication for
Europe is the economic growth that is
expected to result
Several specific sources of increased growth
have been identified:
Gains from eliminating transaction costs
Achievement of economies of scale
More intense competition
Cheaper transaction costs and reduced currency
risks
Many U.S. firms fear a unified Europe
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North American Economic
Integration
Although the EU is undoubtedly the most
successful and well-known integrative
effort, integration efforts in North America
has gained momentum and attention
North American integration has an interest
in purely economic issues and there are no
constituencies for political integration
U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
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Other Economic Alliances
The world’s developing
countries have perhaps
the most to gain from
successful integrative
efforts
Import substitution
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Integration in Latin America
Before the signing of the U.S.-Canada
Free Trade Agreement, all of the major
trading bloc activity in the Americas had
taken place in Latin America
One of the longest lived integration
efforts among developing countries was
the Latin America Free Trade
Association (LAFTA), formed in 1961
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Integration in Asia and Integration
in Africa and the Middle East
The development in
Asia has been
different from that in
Europe and the
Americas
Asian interest in
regional integration
is increasing for
pragmatic reasons
Africa’s economic
groupings range from
currency unions among
European nations and
their former colonies
to customs unions
among neighboring
states
Countries in the Arab
world have made some
progress in economic
integration
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Economic Integration and
the International Manager
Regional economic integration creates
opportunities and challenges for the
international manager
Economic integration may have an impact on a
company’s entry mode
Decisions regarding integrating markets must
be assessed from four different perspectives
Effects of change
Strategic planning
Reorganization
Lobbying
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Cartels and Commodity Price
Agreements
An important characteristic that
distinguishes developing countries from
industrialized countries is the nature of
their export earnings
This distinction is important for several
reasons
A cartel is an association of producers of a
particular good
Commodity price agreements involve
both buyers and sellers in an agreement
to manage the price of a certain
commodity
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